< <





INFO: Trad Archery for Bowhunters



Work in Progress (now with finished photo)

Started by Lin Rhea, December 02, 2011, 10:29:00 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Fallguy

Lin that is amazing. You are a artist with a hammer and file.
"In the end we will conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. We will understand only what we are taught" Baba Dioum  Conservationist

Lin Rhea

Thank you. I enjoy seeing it come together myself. The knife is a by product of the process. To my way of thinking, the process is the real point of interest.
"We dont rent pigs." Augustus McCrae
ABS Master Bladesmith
TGMM Family of the Bow
Dwyer Dauntless longbow 50 @ 28
Ben Pearson recurve 50 @ 28
Tall Tines Recurve 47@28
McCullough Griffin longbow 43@28

gables

Lin, many thanks for sharing the process and answering questions. One of my biggest struggles when doing guards, spacer, ferrules and handles is the sequencing for rough grinding, final grinding and assembly. Can you share some of your process? How much did you rough grind and finish grind before glue up? Is everything final ground before you start the handle? Did you glue on the guard and then grind the spacers and ferrule, pull apart and notch then final glue before starting the handle? It appeared your handle was rough ground before the corby bolts were added. Do you use temporary corbies?
"Art is thoughtful workmanship." W.R. Lethaby

madness522

Lin do you cut off the tops of the corbys or use a belt sander to bring them down?  It looks like that sit flush the scales and yet I don't see sanding marks around them.  Fantastic knife!!
Barry Clodfelter
TGMM Family of the Bow.

Lin Rhea

Barry,
      I grind them off, but have to be easy with the heat. You can burn the horn. Then sand with 1000 and a hard backing stick. If you scratch the horn, you just have to re sand and lightly buff. I said lightly because that will also burn it.

Gabriel,
        When I put the horn on, the guard and ferrule was completely finished and I made the mortise in the horn tight with no slop. Then I just had to lightly draw the back of the ferrule onto the end of the horn and start shaping. A lot is riding on this so you just have to be very careful. At some point I resorted to hand sanding allowing material to finalize at a very small grit.
"We dont rent pigs." Augustus McCrae
ABS Master Bladesmith
TGMM Family of the Bow
Dwyer Dauntless longbow 50 @ 28
Ben Pearson recurve 50 @ 28
Tall Tines Recurve 47@28
McCullough Griffin longbow 43@28

akaboomer

Looks great Lin. The perfect amount of refinment and brute. The Damascus of the Blade, Guard and Spacers with file work with the roughness of the Sheep horn makes this one of my all time favorites. Balance in form and function as well as perfect fit and finish. Outstanding Sir.

Chris

Lamey


Roughcountry

Lin, thanks so much for letting us come along during the process. The knife is indeed proof that it's all about the process.

amar911

That is an absolutely gorgeous knife, Lin! Your skills never cease to amaze me.

Allan
TGMM Family of the Bow

Lin Rhea

Thank you guys. I honestly feel like I am just beginning.
"We dont rent pigs." Augustus McCrae
ABS Master Bladesmith
TGMM Family of the Bow
Dwyer Dauntless longbow 50 @ 28
Ben Pearson recurve 50 @ 28
Tall Tines Recurve 47@28
McCullough Griffin longbow 43@28

Trinity Outfitters

"I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly."  John 10:10

Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement

Copyright 2003 thru 2025 ~ Trad Gang.com ©